Good News in History, April 1

41 years ago today, the Apple Computer company was founded by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne to sell their ground-breaking Apple I personal computer kits. Their startup is now the most valuable company in the world. WATCH a brief history of this amazing company… (1976)

MORE Good News on this Date:

The United States House of Representatives met in NYC and held its first quorum, electing Frederick Muhlenberg of Pennsylvania as its first Speaker (1789)

A London-Paris telephone connection was opened (1891)

The impressionist painter PaulGauguin left France for Tahiti, where he created luminous prolific canvases (1891)

President Nixon signed a law that required the Surgeon General’s warnings on tobacco products and banned cigarette advertising on television and radio in the US beginning the following year (1970)

The world’s seven wealthiest nations (G7) agreed to give $24 billion in aid to the states formerly known as the USSR (1992)

Same-sex marriage became legal in the Netherlands (2001)

The Netherlands legalized euthanasia, becoming the first nation in the world to do so (2002)

Google launched its Gmail service to the public (2004)

And, in 1973, John Lennon and Yoko Ono held a press conference to announce the formation of a new country called Nutopia. Not for April Fools day but ahead of the release of the Mind Games LP that included a written description of the “country” and its laws and a track called Nutopian International Anthem, which contained only silence. “Nutopia has no land, no boundaries, no passports, only people; Nutopia has no laws other than cosmic; all people of Nutopia are ambassadors of the country.”

Also, on this day in 1940, Wangari Maathai, the Kenyan environmental activist and scientist who started the Green Belt Movement, was born. Focused on planting trees, she became the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for “her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace”. Started in 1977 and run mostly by women, Maathai’s movement has planted over 51 million trees and trained 30,000 women in forestry, agriculture, and bee-keeping, helping them earn a living while preserving land. She was also a member of Kenya’s Parliament and the first Eastern African woman to receive a Ph.D. (1940–2011)